Lu You (born 1125, Shanyin [now Shaoxing], Zhejiang province, China—died 1210, Shanyin) was one of the most important and prolific Chinese writers of the Southern Song dynasty, noted for his collection of nearly 10,000 poems as well as numerous prose pieces.
Primarily a poet, Lu gained renown for his simple, direct expression and for his attention to realistic detail, features that set him apart from the elevated and allusive style characteristic of the prevailing Jiangxi school of poetry. As a conservative in matters of form, however, he wrote a number of poems in the gushi (“old poetry”) mode and excelled at the lüshi (“regulated poetry”) form, the sharply defined tonal and grammatical patterns of which had been perfected by the great masters of the Tang dynasty.
Lu has been most admired for the ardour of his patriotic poems, in which he protested the Jin invasion of Song in 1126, the year after his birth, and chided the Southern Song court for its passive attitude toward driving out the invaders and reconquering its lost northern territories. Because of his hawkish views, expressed at a time when the displaced court was controlled by a peace faction, Lu failed to advance in his career as an imperial official. Four times demoted for his outspoken opinions, Lu finally resigned his civil-service commission and retired to his country estate.
During retirement Lu devoted most of his poetry to the appreciation and praise of rural life. Like the poet Tao Qian, whom he took as his model, Lu depicted the rural countryside in homely detail, evoking its moods and scenes through fresh and precise imagery.